GRANOLLERS: FIRST CERTIFICATE 5.50 EUROS HORAS


jueves, 16 de febrero de 2012

The Period

The Period

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Use a period at the end of a command.
  • Hand in the poster essays no later than noon on Friday.
  • In case of tremors, leave the building immediately.
Use a period at the end of an indirect question.
  • The teacher asked why Maria had left out the easy exercises.
  • My father used to wonder why Egbert's ears were so big.
Use a period with abbreviations:
    Dr. Espinoza arrived from Washington, D.C., at 6 p.m.
Notice that when the period ending the abbreviation comes at the end of a sentence, it will also suffice to end the sentence. On the other hand, when an abbreviation ends a question or exclamation, it is appropriate to add a question mark or exclamation mark after the abbreviation-ending period:
    Did you enjoy living in Washington, D.C.?
Occasionally, a statement will end with a question. When that happens, it is appropriate to end the sentence with a question mark.
  • We can get to Boston quicker, can't we, if we take the interstate?
  • His question was, can we end this statement with a question mark?
  • She ended her remarks with a resounding why not?
Acronyms (abbreviations [usually made up of the first letter from a series of words] which we pronounce as words, not a series of letters) usually do not require periods: NATO, NOW, VISTA, LASER, SCUBA, RADAR. Abbreviations we pronounce by spelling out the letters may or may not use periods and you will have to use a dictionary to be sure: FBI, NAACP, NCAA, U.S.A., U.N.I.C.E.F., etc.

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